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Monday, 24 December 2012

We all know that NHS cruel negligence would end if the perpetrators were sacked and subject to criminal prosecution.

We have read in the last two days the most recent reports
of extreme cruelty to which elderly patients have been subjected in an NHS
hospital, the Alexandra Hospital in Redditch. See these reports in the
Telegraph: Here,
Here
and Here.
Yet we all know that NHS cruel negligence would end if the perpetrators were
sacked and subject to criminal prosecution.

We all know that NHS cruel negligence would end if the perpetrators were
sacked and subject to criminal prosecution. We may wonder why no UK government
in all the years since the NHS was founded in 1948 has done anything useful to
stop the cruelty and negligence, the damaged health, the pain and suffering, the
shattered lives of innocent patients. - Why? When we all know that NHS cruel
negligence would end if the perpetrators were sacked and subject to criminal
prosecution.

Why the official pretence that there are only a few bad
(guilty) apples among a shiningly dedicated workforce? We all know that bad
apples spread their rottenness to the other apples unless they are promptly
removed. We all know that NHS cruel negligence would end if
the perpetrators were sacked and subject to criminal prosecution.

Why are the most guilty (and usually the best paid)
personnel moved sideways to jobs in other localities? - jobs exactly similar to
those at which they have signally failed? And why are they paid golden severance
settlements? We all know that NHS cruel negligence would end
if the perpetrators were sacked and subject to criminal prosecution.